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    Internal aspects arise simultaneously with the cognitions... — Carmelics
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    Home/Perception
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    Supports→The appearance of an internally cognizable aspect, not an external object, is the actual cognitive support.

    Internal aspects arise simultaneously with the cognitions they ground, satisfying the concomitance condition.

    Consciousness & MindPerception
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    PerceptionConsciousness & Mind

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    Browse more in Perception
    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    The Yogācāra theory of mental aspects demonstrates that it is the internally cog...The appearance of an internally cognizable aspect, not an external object, is th...Whatever satisfies both conditions of the concomitance criterion is the true cog...

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    Internal aspects that provide a basis for cognition arise simultaneous...89%Internal aspects stand in such a necessary causal relationship to cogn...85%Whatever satisfies both conditions of the concomitance criterion is th...80%The principle of concomitance of cause and effect (kāryakāraṇabhāva) r...79%

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    SEP: mind-indian-buddhism
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    In his Investigation of the Cognitive Support Dignāga takes up, as the title suggests, one of the specific issue debated by Vasubandhu in his Twenty Verses: what exactly should count as an object of cognition? Dignāga's definition of the cognitive support invokes the principle of the concomitance of cause and effect (kāryakāraṇabhāva). Thus, for an object to count as a support (ālambana) for cognitive awareness it must (i) produce a cognition, and (ii) that cognition must take the form of the ob

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